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Recommended Dose: The Best Dance Tracks Of May

Chris Saunders
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Courtesy of the artist

Each month, we listen to hundreds of new electronic music tracks, test the standouts at full volume and highlight the best of the best in a mix called Recommended Dose.

May's offerings highlight musicians from distant parts of the globe: Japan's Keita Sano, South Africa's Nozinja, England's John Heckle, Los Angeles' Seven Davis Jr, plus two producers living in the Netherlands: French-born Stellar OM Source and Korean-German DJ Hunee.

You can keep up with our favorite discoveries throughout June by following @Sami_Yenigun and @spotieotis on Twitter.


/ Courtesy of the artist
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Courtesy of the artist

Keita Sano, "Bouzouk"

One of the most boring things about contemporary EDM is how monorhythmic it is. I'm not talking beats per minute (although one number does seem to rule them all), but rhythms per beat. Keita Sano, an adventurous young producer from Okayama, Japan, mixes and matches a plethora of patterns on "Bouzouk," the final track on his latest EP, Sweet Bitter Love. Vibes, percussion and handclaps slowly congregate and build up steam before two riffs jump in: a simple LCD Soundsystem-style 4/4 bass line and a syncopated cross-rhythm. The conflicting elements dance around each other until Sano introduces a bonkers bouzouki sample reminiscent of that Punjabi MCs track. One of the best tracks of 2015 so far.

Appears In The Mix: 00:00 - 05:22

Sweet Bitter Love is out now on Spring Theory.


/ Courtesy of the artist
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Courtesy of the artist

John Heckle, "Alpha Deux"

If you haven't heard of John Heckle yet, it's not for a lack of determination on his part. The Merseyside, England, producer released nine EPs last year (granted, they were anonymous) and has been DJing since he was 15 years old. His next EP, Wet Noises, is due out in early June, and "Alpha Deux" — the A-side's second song, get it? — is basically two tracks stitched together. The opening two minutes of ambient fog give way to a pounding Chicago house beat with nimble acid flourishes and judicious deployment of sirens.

Appears In The Mix: 05:23 - 09:30

Wet Noises is out June 8 on Midnight Shift.


/ Courtesy of the artist
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Courtesy of the artist

Hunee, "Hiding The Moon"

Amsterdam-based Hun Choi, better known as Hunee, will release his debut LP, Hunch Music, in June, to the delight of many left-leaning house fans. The German-born son of Korean immigrants has been a positive force in the dance underground for many years, forming alliances with the Rush Hour Recordings and Future Times stables. He made critical waves last year when he curated Sounds From The Far East, a compilation of hard-to-find Japanese dance music. "Hiding The Moon," the wildest track on Hunch Music, balances a hefty conveyor belt of a beat with shimmering vibes and live hardware squiggles. Things get nuts halfway through when Choi drops in what sounds like some unholy hybrid of cello and bear.

Appears In The Mix: 09:31 - 15:03

Hunch Music is out June 23 on Rush Hour Recordings.


Labadie Vantour / Courtesy of the artist
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Courtesy of the artist

Stellar OM Source, "Live"

The title to the latest single by Christelle Gauldi, who records as Stellar OM Source, succinctly articulates her relationship with electronic music. The French expatriate, who will release her new EP Nite-Glo in June, prefers to stumble upon her songs using such vintage hardware as the Roland TB-303 bass synth and sequencer, while avoiding digital audio programs like Ableton. The result is decidedly retro, which in these quantized times doesn't sound all that stale. The dirty 303 hook at the foundation of "Live" owes a bit to the Joey Beltram classic "Mentasm," and any excuse to revisit that track is always welcome.

Appears In The Mix: 15:04 - 20:30

Nite-Glo is out June 9 on Rvng, Intl.


/ Courtesy of the artists
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Courtesy of the artists

Beat Spacek, "I Wanna Know (Seven Davis Jr Midnight Remix)"

U.K. soul veteran Beat Spacek (a.k.a. Steve White) made some noise earlier this year when he released an album, Modern Streets, produced entirely on an iPad. The record's lead single, "I Wanna Know," gets the remix treatment by Seven Davis Jr, a L.A. funk enthusiast we've featured on this program before. 7DJ scrubs away the original's paranoiac undertones with an irrepressible kick drum/hi-hat combo in his best work since signing to Ninja Tune late last year. Seven Davis Jr's debut full-length, Universes, is due out this summer.

Appears In The Mix: 20:31 - 24:56

Modern Streets is out now on Ninja Tune.


Nozinja, "Xihukwani"

One of our favorite compilations of this decade so far is Shangaan Electro: New Wave Dance Music From South Africa, a staggeringly upbeat collection of raw synth workouts. The man behind that album is Richard Mthetwa, or Nozinja, a former mobile phone repairman from the Limpopo province who transformed a local dance trend into an international cult fixation. Mthetwa signed with the electronic music dons at Warp Records last year, and is set to release his first full-length, Nozinja Lodge, for the label June 2. "Xihukwani" brings the same ecstatic energy we heard on Shangaan Electro, at a slightly slower pace and a brighter resolution.

Appears In The Mix: 24:57 - 28:00

Nozinja Lodge is out June 2 on Warp.

Copyright 2022 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Sami Yenigun is the Executive Producer of NPR's All Things Considered and the Consider This podcast. Yenigun works with hosts, editors, and producers to plan and execute the editorial vision of NPR's flagship afternoon newsmagazine and evening podcast. He comes to this role after serving as a Supervising Editor on All Things Considered, where he helped launch Consider This and oversaw the growth of the newsmagazine on new platforms.
Otis Hart